Championship Speed and Power Drills: Throws

Product Description

Implement an effective speed, power, & conditioning program to build a more powerful, coordinated, and athletic thrower!

Get 45+ drills that develop greater linear motion to improve distance

Incorporate different methods of developing power in your training program for throwers

Understand the key areas of the thrower's kinetic chain that must be developed in order to compete at a higher level

with A.G. Kruger,University of South Dakota Assistant Coach/Throws;3x US Olympian; 14x National USA Champion in Hammer & Weight Throw; NCAA DII National Champion (hammer throw);2001 NCAA DII National Outdoor Male Track and Field Athlete of the Year; Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS), and is a certified Functional Movement Screening (FMS)

Balance, coordination and athleticism in the ring are a crucial phase in the throwing events. The more athletic your throwers are, the more power they will put into their throws. This will lead to a more compete and successful thrower who will dominate the ring. High performance speed and power drills that teach this philosophy are essential behind a training program designed for success.

Coach Kruger explains that to be a successful thrower, it comes down to what the athlete can do in the ring. He emphasizes the main teaching points behind his speed and power drills:

Keep everything moving forward

Keep the chest up

Explode the hips up and out

Kruger uses drills to emphasize that the goal for all throwing events is the distance of the implement. Components behind these drills teach how to plant, how to work on stability, and how to keep everything moving forward.

Throwing Program

A throwing program needs to have many different elements to develop speed and power. Doing throws that mimic movements to the throwing events without the strain of throwing actual implements can be beneficial in technique while also reducing injuries. In addition to common exercises for strength training, Coach Kruger's program includes:

Reinforce sound mechanics and explain the why, not just the how, of any exercise demonstrated. Coach Kruger presents three common flaws found in most thrower's programs:

Throwers are true anaerobic athletes and must be trained as such. Strength, speed, power and athleticism are crucial for today's throwers and must be developed.

Throwers don't naturally have good body awareness, therefore they will have poor balance, mobility, footwork, core strength, and coordination.

Throwers don't receive enough information behind the specifics into programming: speed, agility, med ball throws, box jumps and plyometrics development. Coaches must be able to effectively demonstrate these athletic implements before they can teach them to their throwers.

Coach Kruger demonstrates the drills that work on skills, power, and form to develop the techniques needed by successful athletes. These drills are designed to teach power, which results in greater distance of the thrown implement.